Human Rights

A Mother Wrote An Emotional Note To Her Daughter's Drug Dealer

The note included a photo of the mom hugging her daughter's urn.

A Mother Wrote An Emotional Note To Her Daughter's Drug Dealer
Getty Images / John Moore

A mother in a small Missouri town posted an emotional photo on Facebook to her daughter's drug dealer. 

Tina Wells Louden wrote, "To my daughter's drug dealer, this is how I spend my daughter's birthday now....how do you live with yourself??? That's all I wanna kno (sic)...."

SEE MORE: Heroin Overdoses In The US Tripled Over The Course Of 4 Years

Louden's daughter Ashley died in 2013. KSDK reports her daughter used heroin for about five years before she died. 

This Missouri family is not alone. Heroin use is an epidemic in the United States, and the recent World Drug Report from the United Nations called it "one of the major drugs of public health concern." 

The UN report attributes the increased American use of heroin to several factors, including law enforcement and regulatory actions, as well as increased accessibility, reduced prices and high purity.

Lawmakers in the U.S. recognize the problem. In March, President Barack Obama took administrative action to expand access to treatment, implement or expand syringe services programs and create a task force to increase access to mental health and substance abuse programs. 

In July, Congress passed a bill that was signed into law by President Obama that authorizes grant programs for abuse prevention and education, expands access to treatment and recovery options and provides specific abuse prevention for veterans, women and children. 

Louden's Facebook post struck a chord with social media users. In the first week since it was posted, it's been shared nearly 250,000 times and garnered over 13,000 comments.